Assistant Professor & HSA Facilitator
Department of Counseling & Human Services

Kevin Snow

EDUCATION BULDING
NORFOLK, 23529

Kevin C. Snow, Ph.D., M.A., NCC, ACS is an Assistant Professor of Human Services at Old Dominion University. Previously, he was an Associate Professor of Counselor Education, Clinical Mental Health Program Director, and Chair of the Department of Psychology & Counseling at Marywood University in Scranton, PA. He was also previously an Assistant Professor of Counseling at Texas A&M University-Commerce. A native Pennsylvanian, he is a graduate of Shippensburg University of PA, Indiana University of PA, Penn State Harrisburg, and Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA (Ph.D.). Prior to becoming a professor, he worked in a diverse range of community mental health clinical settings for 12 years. His research interests include spirituality and spiritual competence and inclusion, qualitative research design, advocacy in social justice and diversity issues in the helping professions, and international counseling issues. He has served on the editorial review boards of the national journals Counselor Education and Supervision (CE&S) and the Journal of Counselor Leadership and Advocacy (JCLA), and the international Canadian Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, and was co-editor of the Journal of Human Services. He is the author of many published articles, book chapters, reports, and is co-author of The Dictionary of Counseling and Human Services, among other writing and editorial projects. He is active within state, regional, national, and international counseling and human services professional associations including NOHS, ACA, ACES, CSI, IAC, and PCA, and is past-president of the Northeast Pennsylvania Counseling Association (NEPCA).

Ph.D. in Counseling, Old Dominion University, (2015)

Research Interests

My research interests include spirituality and spiritual competence and inclusion, qualitative research design, advocacy in social justice and diversity issues in the helping professions, and international counseling issues.